Eli’s opening monologue and reviews of Eli, the actor

From what I’ve found, the reviewers have been kind to Eli Manning.

Writes Marc Snetiker of Entertainment Weekly:

The brunt of the monologue was Manning’s self-proclaimed expertise about New York City, which included recommendations to get tickets to Cats and eat New York cuisine at Olive Garden.

Thus began the theme of the night: Manning as dimwitted doofus. Whether this reflects something about Manning’s public persona or if it’s simply an easy approach to writing for a gawky jock, I don’t know — but Manning was up for it, and in any case, he delivered on what he was given (although his cue card reading skills could use some polishing).

Writes Ralph Vacchiano of the New York Daily News:

He held one older brother’s head in a toilet, gave another a wedgie, and shot  another with an arrow.

“We know that big brothers can be real d—heads,” Eli said.

That’s not a side the usually calm, polite and sometimes awkward Manning has  ever shown publicly, but he was clearly willing to step way out of character  during his star turn on SNL.

Writes Tim Keeney of Bleacher Report:

It was Eli’s decision—whether it was his or not—to Tebow on national television that will have everyone talking about him and falling in love with him.

When in doubt about whether or not you’re going to actually be funny on a show that is built to be funny, just Tebow.

Seriously, it works everytime.

 

Posted in NBC

Eli’s ‘Little Brother’ scores on SNL

Not sure that Eli Manning topped his brother Peyton’s performance, but he did have some moments as host of Saturday Night Live.

The most memorable came in an ad for “Little Brothers,” in which Eli, a little brother himself, got revenge against the evil big brothers of the world. It was topped by a wonderful kicker line at the end aimed at a certain future Hall of Fame quarterback.

 

Sunday bookshelf: Bill Veeck, the maverick of baseball

Since I hope some of you still read books, I decided to use Sunday to inform you of the latest offerings in the sports category.

Today’s entry is Bill Veeck: Baseball’s Greatest Maverick, written by Paul Dickson. The book is the first biography of the legendary owner and showman, who dared to defy convention in baseball.

Veeck’s autobiography, Veeck as in Wreck, is considered a classic. However, that book was written in 1962. Much happened in his life after that, including saving the White Sox for Chicago with his purchase of the team in 1975.

Veeck was one of baseball’s most memorable characters. It’s no surprise that his biography makes a compelling tale. In a review of the book, Dave Hoekstra of the Chicago Sun-Times writes:

Bill Veeck works as a wonderful companion piece to Veeck as in Wreck and the 1965 Hustler’s Handbook, both written by Veeck with newspaperman Ed Linn. Dickson’s biography looks at “Sport Shirt Bill” and goes beyond the “Disco Demolition” and the Eddie Gaedel midget stunt for which Veeck is most often associated. Bill Veeck: Baseball’s Greatest Maverick is a portrait of a uniquely rounded and compassionate spirit.

Here are some other blurbs from the critics on Amazon.

Bill Veeck: Baseball’s Greatest Maverick incorporates the picaresque anecdotes and populist charm of Veeck’s memoirs into a narrative marked by Mr. Dickson’s broad knowledge and fluid authority. The result is a biography that newcomers to the Veeck legend are likely to find immensely appealing, but one that also makes him new again for those who have already savored the baseball showman’s own episodic volumes.”—Maxwell Carter, The Wall Street Journal

“Any man who wanted to be included on Richard Nixon’s enemies list is worthy of a searching biography—and Paul Dickson has been kind ehough to do that for us with his compelling portrait of the unregenerate Bill Veeck.”—Ray Robinson, author of Iron Horse: Lou Gehrig In His Time

“BILL VEECK, in the language of the subject, is a homerun—a bases clearer. The story of the remarkable full-life of this pioneering baseball character is told with the steadiness, detail and flare that we have come to expect from Paul Dickson,  the premier all-star writer and reporter. The book is great fun—much like being in the bleachers during a day game.”—Jim Lehrer

“Bill Veeck didn’t want to break rules, he insisted, just “test their elasticity.” He wasn’t talking only about baseball. The master showman, who famously sent a three-foot-seven-inch batter to the plate, also desegregated the American League and proudly marched in the funeral procession for Dr. Martin Luther King—on his peg leg and without crutches. BILL VEECK revisits a golden age for baseball, a pivotal time for America and some hilarious moments in the life of a man who helped to change both.”—Clarence Page, Pulitzer Prize-winning columnist, Chicago Tribune

“Bill Veeck was inventive, courageous, principled, and hugely influential–the Thomas Paine of a revolutionary time in baseball. He told his own story in VEECK–AS IN WRECK, back in 1962, but even a man as famously candid as Veeck cannot be fully portrayed in an autobiography. He has awaited a clear-eyed admiring chronicler, and in Paul Dickson he has found him. This amazingly detailed, delicious biography is, as its subject might have titled it, VEECK–AS IN SPEC-tacular!”—John Thorn, Official Historian, Major League Baseball, and author of Baseball in the Garden of Eden

“We knew Bill Veeck was the baron of ballyhoo. We didn’t know (or at least I didn’t) that he was a patriot as high-flying as Ted Williams, a racial barrier-buster as fearless as Branch Rickey, a gadfly who set the mold for Charlie Finley, and a one-of-a-kind iconoclast who was irresistible. So don’t resist. Buy Paul Dickson’s new book and have a blast.”—Larry Tye, author of Satchel: The Life and Times of an American Legend

“A definitive look at one of baseball’s greatest innovators and ambassadors. A must-read.”—Claire Smith, ESPN

“Bill Veeck has finally met his match.  Paul Dickson, consummate baseball historian, has given Veeck the biography he deserves. Meticulously reported and exhaustively researched, Bill Veeck: Baseball’s Greatest Maverick is, like its subject, a show-stopper.”—Jane Leavy, author of The Last Boy: Mickey Mantle and the End of America’s Childhood and Sandy Koufax

“[S]ure to entertain is Paul Dickson’s latest: Bill Veeck: Baseball’s Greatest Maverick (Walker). As you’d expect, Veeck’s trials, tribulations and experiments with the great game as its greatest promoter may well hold center stage, but Dickson has done something with this biography that I particularly loved about John Sickels’ bio of Bob Feller, which is to write a book that also covers this man’s life outside of the game. Maybe this is a matter of giving the “Greatest Generation” its due, but Veeck was a combat volunteer who lost his leg in the Marines during World War II.”—Christina Kahrl, ESPN, “Sweet Spot”

“Paul Dickson has knocked another one out of the park with Bill Veeck: Baseball’s Greatest Maverick a skillfully written biography, scrupulously researched, brimming with revealing anecdotes and historical detail, while unpacking Veeck’s views of social injustice (inside and outside the park),along with his quest to provide fans with a show even if their team wasn’t on the road to clinching a pennant….So if you’re planning your summer reading list, I recommend you place  Dickson’s enlightening and highly entertaining biography on one of baseball’s most combative if influential owners at the very top of your list.”—Bill Lucey, The Morning Delivery.

“The proof of goodness is usually in the details, so it becomes clear right off the bat that Dickson has written an authoritative work.”—Mike Downey, The Los Angeles Times.

“In his lively (and occasionally beatific) biography, baseball and cultural historian Paul Dickson brings Veeck to life, relentlessly digging into his career and times to create a portrait of the kind of guy you’d like to have in your corner – or at your table for a drink.” Chris Foran, Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel

To be ignorant of Bill Veeck’s legacy to baseball is akin to being unaware of Steve Jobs’ role in computers. A maverick and visionary, Bill Veeck transformed the way owners promoted the game while captivating the press and public with his charisma and penchant for challenging the status quo. His controversial signing of Larry Doby, the first black player in the American League, is an example of a Veeck initiative deftly chronicled by Paul Dickson, baseball’s pre-eminent lexicographer (“The Dickson Baseball Dictionary”). “Bill Veeck” comes as close to a “must-read” as any baseball book in recent memory. Grade: Home run.”–Mark Hodermarsky, Cleveland Plain Dealer

 

Roll call of athlete hosts on SNL; Why is Tony Danza on list?

From Wikipedia.

As of 2012, there have been 35 sports figures who have hosted SNL. They include athletes, former pro athletes, coaches, owners, & sports commentators.

Why is Tony Danza on this list? Even though he once boxed professionally (9-3 career record), he wasn’t asked to host SNL for his athletic skills.

Also, note the second athlete host. Much better days back then for O.J.

Host Occupation Number of episodes First hosted Last hosted
Fran Tarkenton football player 1 January 29, 1977
O. J. Simpson football player 1 February 25, 1978
Bill Russell basketball player 1 November 3, 1979
John Madden football coach/sportscaster 1 January 30, 1982
Bob Uecker baseball player/sportscaster 1 October 13, 1984
Alex Karras football player/wrestler/sportscaster 1 February 2, 1985
Howard Cosell sportscaster 1 April 13, 1985
Hulk Hogan wrestler 1 March 30, 1985
Mr. T wrestler/actor 1 March 30, 1985
Tony Danza boxer/actor 2 April 19, 1986 January 28, 1989
Marvin Hagler boxer 1 May 17, 1986
Billy Martin baseball player/manager 1 May 24, 1986
Joe Montana football player 1 January 24, 1987
Walter Payton football player 1 January 24, 1987
Carl Weathers football player/actor 1 January 30, 1988
Wayne Gretzky hockey player 1 May 13, 1989
Chris Evert tennis player 1 November 11, 1989
George Steinbrenner New York Yankees owner 1 October 20, 1990
Michael Jordan basketball player 1 September 28, 1991
Charles Barkley basketball player 3 September 25, 1993 January 7, 2012
Nancy Kerrigan figure skater 1 March 13, 1994
George Foreman boxer 1 December 17, 1994
Deion Sanders football/baseball player 1 February 18, 1995
Dwayne “The Rock” Johnson wrestler/actor 3 March 18, 2000 March 7, 2009
Derek Jeter baseball player 1 December 1, 2001
Jonny Moseley freestyle skiing 1 March 2, 2002
Jeff Gordon NASCAR driver 1 January 11, 2003
Andy Roddick tennis player 1 November 8, 2003
Tom Brady football player 1 April 16, 2004
Lance Armstrong cyclist 1 October 29, 2005
Jason Lee skateboarder/actor 1 November 12, 2005
Peyton Manning football player 1 March 24, 2007
LeBron James basketball player 1 September 29, 2007
Michael Phelps Olympic swimmer 1 September 13, 2008
Eli Manning football player 1 May 5, 2012
Posted in NBC

ESPN classic ad: Manning brothers get dad mad

More Manning stuff to get you ready for Eli’s starring role on SNL tonight.

Here’s one of my all-time favorite ESPN ads: The Manning brothers acting like brothers during a tour of the facility. Note how hard Peyton kicks Eli at the end. Nothing made up there.

Do you suppose Peyton knew that one day Eli would have more Super Bowl titles than him?

Here’s a DirecTV ad they did.

 

 

Sounds of silence from Hawk Harrelson

Awful Announcing was somewhat incredulous that White Sox announcer Ken “Hawk” Harrelson went silent for a minute last night. Harrelson didn’t say a word after Jhonny Peralta hit a two-run, ninth inning homer to give Detroit a 5-4 victory over the Sox.

Sox fans get it. It was a brutal defeat. The silence spoke volumes for what Harrelson and Sox fans were feeling at that moment.

BRUUUUTALLLLL!

Saturday flashback: Peyton Manning on Saturday Night Live

It’s Eli Manning’s turn to host Saturday Night Live tonight. Brother Peyton had the duties in 2007.

Of all the SNL sports hosts, you could make the case that Peyton was the best. His spoof of the United Way commercial was a classic.

SNL didn’t have the actual link on its site, but I did find a clip of the bit that ran during a Fox News report.

Here’s a video of Peyton talking about the SNL experience. Interesting to note that Manning said there wasn’t much rehearsal of the skits prior to air.

Check back later today. I’ll have more videos from the ads Eli and Peyton did together.

 

Why Sports Illustrated devoted issue to Title IX

There are moments that change sports forever. But what happened in June, 1972 changed lives.

Richard Nixon signed a new statute called Title IX, calling for equal opportunities in higher education for women. The landmark legislation opened the door for young women to enjoy the same experiences in sports as young men.

To celebrate the 40th anniversary, Sports Illustrated featured the words of Title IX on the cover of this week’s issue and then dedicated 23 pages to pictures and coverage inside.

It’s a highly unusual move for SI, considering it never devotes that kind of space to a single issue, let alone an issue about women’s sports. But it speaks to the magnitude of Title IX.

Writes Kelli Anderson:

According a report provided by the Women’s Sports Foundation, 294,015 girls competed in high school sports four decades ago. By last year the number had ballooned to 3,173,549, and it’s growing.

I did a Q/A with senior editor Trisha Blackmar, who oversaw the package.

How did this issue come out about?

Blackmar: Last fall, we recognized we hadn’t done anything on Title IX since the 20th anniversary. We ran it by (managing editor) Terry McDonell and he was very supportive. Outside of a sport preview issue, I can’t think of another time where we devoted the entire feature well to one issue. Once I heard we had the pages, we ran with it.

Why is Title IX an important story for Sports Illustrated?

Blackmar: I think it is important to acknowledge there still is a struggle for gender equity. We thought the best way to address it would be to do stories on the past, now, and looking ahead to the future. They look at the entire scope of issues related to Title IX.

Why did SI decide use words on the cover instead of photos?

Blackmar: Our designer (Chris Hercik) wanted to do a graphic treatment. I handed him the 37-words (from Title IX), thinking he could this as part of the graphic. It was his idea to use that as the whole cover and highlight the words that he did. I thought it looked fantastic when I saw it. It really grabs your attention. It’s all you need to say.

 

 

Hockey fans respond to ESPN Doria’s coverage comments

Nothing like some comments questioning hockey’s popularity to get its fans to throw down the gloves.

Yesterday, I did a post on Vince Doria, senior VP and director of news, insisting ESPN doesn’t hate hockey. However, the network, which no longer has the rights, doesn’t like it much. Prior to the playoffs, you’d be hard-pressed to find much NHL coverage during SportsCenter.

Doria’s views generated an interesting response. Deadspin dinged him for saying hockey “doesn’t transfer much to a national discussion.”

Wrote Patrick Burns:

It’s always funny when ESPN executives innocently talk about “national discussions,” as if national discussions happen apart from ESPN—as if they rise organically out the soil in New York and Deer Isle and Des Moines and Tupelo and San Bernardino. ESPN is the national discussion; if ESPN doesn’t discuss hockey, the nation doesn’t, either.

Meanwhile, I received plenty of comments on my site.

Reilly wrote:

ESPN, stop being a joke. Stop ramming down our throats Tebow, Lebron, Baseball and actually cover a sport like a real journalist would. I could give two SH!TS about Tebow right now or the draft, i don’t care about game three of the Heat/Knicks which the heat should win, I care about a triple OT game in the second round of the playoffs… and I know a lot of people not in NY or WAS did to!

From DRBEAR:

Well of course there isn’t demand. It is as if McDonald’s used to carry hamburgers, then dropped most of them from the menu and just carried one type at lunch. Then they say “of course we don’t carry many different kinds of hamburgers, there isn’t the interest.” To my mind, an all-sports network should cover all sports. If it doesn’t, it’s not doing its job.

LegendofVT chimed in:

Doria is delusional if he thinks that asking the producers of SportsCenter, Around The Horn, and PTI to add more hockey content during the playoffs, after ignoring the sport during the regular season, is enough to bring hockey fans back. There’s plenty of lip service, but nothing that indicates that they’re willing to repair their relationship with us.

Doria, though, did have somebody who agreed with him. Kaz said:

I agree. As a die-hard fan, I almost prefer to read/watch something very home-team-centric. Maybe I am a bit of a homer and only want to here good stuff, but the bad stuff is interesting, too. I have the Center Ice package, but never watch a game other than my favorite team…